海角精品黑料

Movie Review: In Christopher Nolan’s ‘The Odyssey,’ an ancient epic is reborn

Getting home, and turning back the clock, has long been at the root of Christopher Nolan鈥檚 films. The astronauts of painstakingly lose 23 years in space travel, almost the same length of time Odysseus is away from home in : a decade fighting the Trojan War, a decade trying to return to Ithaca.

So, to a remarkable degree, Nolan鈥檚 鈥淭he Odyssey鈥 鈥 faithful as it is to Homer鈥檚 epic poem 鈥 feels, down to its nonlinear DNA, like a Nolan movie. The authorship of the epic poem, dated to the 7th or 8th century BC, is complex. But no one could question the maker of this 鈥淥dyssey,鈥 an earthy, existential epic that ravishingly melds the storytelling of antiquity with contemporary IMAX-sized bravado.

As a story about a man whose cunning offends the gods, 鈥淭he Odyssey鈥 feels very much like a companion piece, if not a downright sequel, to Odysseus (Matt Damon, in the role of his life) is increasingly racked with guilt for the violence and death he鈥檚 wrought after his ingenuity led to the sacking of Troy.

The arrival of any new Nolan spectacle inevitably leads to its own kind of assault, and avalanches of 鈥渕asterpiece鈥 proclamations. (I鈥檓 .) But while 鈥淭he Odyssey,鈥 Nolan鈥檚 first film shot entirely with IMAX cameras, doesn鈥檛 skimp on grandiosity, it works surprisingly well as a simpler, human-sized tale.

The journey 鈥 you may have heard, it鈥檚 about the journey 鈥 is sometimes a little clunky, and the sheer Nolan-ness of the production, not to mention the historic nature of the tale, inevitably saps it of some freshness. You could make a credible case that Nolan has already made a movie about a guy trying to reach his family through strata of mind-warping illusion, and it鈥檚 called 鈥淚nception.鈥 Such is the trouble with urtexts.

But 鈥淭he Odyssey鈥 is rarely not transfixing, and it鈥檚 a ripping adventure story, besides. At the least, it鈥檚 the definitive big-screen adaptation of one of literature’s oldest tales 鈥 a not-too-shabby accomplishment for a filmmaker of restless ambition.

It鈥檚 not until Book 5 that Odysseus enters Homer鈥檚 poem, and Nolan, who also wrote the screenplay, likewise begins in Ithaca. There, Odysseus鈥 home is overrun by feasting suitors in pursuit of his wife, Penelope (Anne Hathaway). Foremost among them is Antinous, who鈥檚 played with sleazy perfection by Robert Pattinson. For an actor often (pleasingly) at odds with the movies around him, Pattinson has never slid more seamlessly into a part.

Telemachus (Tom Holland, also well-cast), the youthful son of Penelope and Odysseus, resolves to go in search of his father. Meanwhile, we catch up with Odysseus, weathered and white-bearded, following the fall of Troy. His forced conscription, by Agamemnon, is shown in flashbacks. Agamemnon is depicted with an imposing Darth Vader-like presence and played by Benny Safdie, but the real star is his hulking, mohawked helmet.

Such vivid details abound in Nolan鈥檚 richly textured film. The simple rocking of Odysseus鈥 longship, off the Mediterranean coast, is glorious. Some of Nolan鈥檚 and cinematographer Hoyte van Hoytema鈥檚 most impressive work has come when they鈥檙e faced with the elements (as in ). And 鈥淭he Odyssey鈥 is flooded with stormy seas and enchanted isles. If anything, the movie could have gone further; I was promised rosy-fingered dawns.

The first line of Homer鈥檚 poem, as translated by Emily Wilson (the version Nolan leaned on), refers to Odysseus as 鈥渁 complicated man.鈥 James Joyce, whose 鈥淯lysses鈥 was based on 鈥淭he Odyssey,鈥 once noted that while Hamlet is merely a son, Ulysses, or Odysseus, is a father, a husband, a lover and a warrior. In short, he鈥檚 an Everyman, albeit an especially smart one. And Damon, the most amiable of Everymen, proves especially attuned to the multifaceted nature of the archetypal hero.

We meet him first as a soldier, leading a small group of ships away from Agamemnon鈥檚 fleet, setting a southerly course with his second-in-command Eurylochus (an excellent Himesh Patel). Their route takes them on a series of episodic quests: a cave encounter with Polyphemus, the Cyclops; a pine forest attack by the man-eating giants, the Laestrygonians; a meal with the witch Circe (Samantha Morton); and Odysseus鈥 seven-year interlude with the sea nymph Calypso (a beguilingly sincere Charlize Theron).

You could argue that the movie can feel like a series of sketched-together set pieces, but what set pieces! That includes the tale of the Trojan horse, a fleeting mention in the poem but here a centerpiece. You can tell that Nolan, who nearly made 鈥淭roy鈥 more than two decades ago, has had the sequence 鈥 beginning with the Trojan horse sunk in the sand and leading to the burning of Troy 鈥 on his mind for years.

Each stop on Odysseus’ journey gives Nolan a mythic playground to explore imagery that verges on the stuff of horror. I was most intoxicated by 鈥淭he Odyssey鈥 in its most surreal moments: the sight of a giant hand emerging out of the shadows, the meeting with the 鈥渟hades鈥 of Odysseus鈥 dead army, risen from the black soil of Hades.

鈥淎 time of apparent magic鈥 is how the movie is introduced. Nolan has wisely opted to keep the gods sidelined. Their powers are real, but with the exception of Zendaya鈥檚 Athena, who appears like a confidant to Odysseus, the gods, themselves, remain off-screen.

That choice draws Nolan鈥檚 鈥淥dyssey,鈥 and its themes of sacrifice, fidelity and honor, closer to reality. And it makes Nolan鈥檚 decision to cast his film widely all the more essential. This is a story, passed down for centuries by singers and storytellers, that belongs to all of humankind. Casting the movie with a wide spectrum of actors, including Lupita Nyong鈥檕 as Helen of Troy, is not only fair game for a purely mythic tale but it gives the movie a present-day vitality. Seeing actors like Elliot Page (indelible as a fallen soldier), John Leguizamo (as the loyal servant Eumaeus) and Damon in this ancient context is a very big reason to see 鈥淭he Odyssey,鈥 and why Homer鈥檚 told and retold tale is worth revisiting, at all. If today has no role, what’s the point? They didn’t have cameras in 700 B.C., either.

Nolan鈥檚 鈥淥dyssey鈥 is nearly three hours long but never slow going. And it’s the friction between past and present that propels the movie as much as Odysseus’ wayward path. Gender roles are examined even while traditional masculinity is upheld. The ending of the poem, a tricky thing since it features mass murder, is given a more palatable action-movie melee. But the essence of 鈥淭he Odyssey鈥 is here, and Odysseus’ quest to live down his mistakes and uphold his convictions feels vibrant again. Nolan, you might say, is at home.

鈥淭he Odyssey,鈥 a Universal Pictures release in theaters Thursday, is rated R by the Motion Picture Association for violence and some language. Running time: 172 minutes. Three and a half stars out of four.

Copyright © 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, written or redistributed.

Federal News Network Logo
Log in to your 海角精品黑料 account for notifications and alerts customized for you.